William Sarradet writes about recent exhibitions in Dallas and Houston at Ro2 Art Projects, FotoFest, Basket Books & Art, and Sicardi | Ayers | Bacino.
Ro2 Art
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Five-Minute ToursVideo
Five-Minute Tours: Laura J. Lawson at Ro2 Art Gallery, Dallas
by Glasstireby GlasstireA video tour of an exhibition by artist Laura J. Lawson, on view at Ro2 Art Gallery in Dallas.
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Five-Minute ToursVideo
Five-Minute Tours: Lillian Young at Ro2 Art, Dallas
by Glasstireby GlasstireA video exhibition tour featuring a show by artist Lillian Young at Ro2 Art in Dallas.
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Five-Minute ToursVideo
Five-Minute Tours: Brantly Sheffield at Ro2 Art, Dallas
by Glasstireby GlasstireA video tour of artist Brantly Sheffield's exhibition on view at Ro2 Art in Dallas.
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William Sarradet writes about recent exhibitions at Ro2 Art and 4DWN in Dallas, and the International Museum of Art & Science in McAllen.
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This week: an exhibition of large-scale paintings exploring the relationship between nature and technology in Dallas, a solo show of ten years of organic and geometric abstraction in El Paso, an artist confronts herself and her family with the material excess of American life in Galveston, and more.
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Ro2 Art, a Dallas-based gallery, recently announced its lease of a new property located in Dallas’ TIN District, west of downtown.
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William Sarradet on exhibitions currently on view at the African American Museum Of Dallas, Ro2 Art, The MAC, and Samuel Lynne Gallery.
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This week: mind-bending prints in Houston, an annual exhibition of works by over 150 artists in Dallas, artists' dream projects in Austin, and more.
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Jessica Fuentes interviews Julon Pinkston about his current exhibition, “Marshwiggle Apparitions,” at Ro2 Art in Dallas.
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Revier’s show has the capacity to illustrate Texas’ relationship to the rising tides of change, with the nuance that only an artist could muster.
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What a fool I was to believe that a few minutes would be enough time to get to the bottom of it all.
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No matter what kind of mood her works evoke, they are always intuitive
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Christopher Blay and Christina Rees on a paper show exposed to the elements, a show of sinister little dwellings, and a way to see a lot of art in one trip.
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Brandon Zech and Christina Rees on an Englishman’s take on Texas, the ruin of Trump’s Taj Mahal, and an online show of short videos that caters to corona brain.
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The most powerful thing about the show is not its aesthetic or technical prowess — but rather its ability to offer a temporary calm in our chaotic moment.
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Big Tex is an abstract everyman who somehow manages to be nobody.
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He was a kind man who struggled with life as we all sometimes do, and created a path of his own.
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Christina Rees and Christopher Blay are joined by Houston artist Patrick Renner to run down the top five art events in Texas this week.
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Christina Rees and Brandon Zech on his love for fake-food art, Christina’s thing for animal art, and some shows that wade into darker territory.